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Label:
  PentaTone Classics - http://www.pentatonemusic.com/
Serial:
  PTC 5186 050
Title:
  Schubert: Piano Trios - Storioni Trio
Description:
  Schubert: Piano Trio No. 1 in B flat Op. 99, Piano Trio No. 2 in E flat Op. 100

Storioni Trio
Details:
 
Genre:
  Classical - Chamber
Content:
  Stereo/Multichannel
Media:
  Hybrid
Recording type:
  DSD
Recording info:
 

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Reviews: 3

Site review by Castor June 28, 2007
Performance:  Sonics (MC):
The Storioni Trio follow up their excellent and well received recording of a couple of Beethoven’s Piano Trios Beethoven: Piano Trios - Storioni Trio with an equally recommendable coupling of two of Schubert’s greatest chamber works, the B flat and E flat Piano Trios.

By means of a judicious choice of repeats, the Storioni Trio have fitted both works on to one SACD lasting 79.32. This has in no way compromised their interpretations of these pieces for the listener, and many will welcome having these two wonderful trios without the need to buy an extra disc. Of course, this aspect would be irrelevant if the performances on offer were inferior. Happily that is not the case.

The Storioni Trio’s approach in both works could best be described as Apollonian rather than Dionysian. They studiously avoid any over-romanticism of the music, and while this somewhat austere approach can lead at times to a sense of coolness it does let the music speak on its own terms without indulgence and excessive interpretive gestures. It is the antithesis of what is to be heard on the classic the Cortot-Thibaud-Casals CD.

One thing about which there can be little argument is the quality of PentaTone’s beautifully balanced recording. Made in the Concertboerderij Valthermond, which seems an ideal chamber music venue, it has both warmth and clarity and realistically captures the three instruments and their placement in the hall.

Those of a hypersensitive disposition who require this music to “trouble the soul” will have to look elsewhere, but in spite of a strong allegiance to the Beaux Arts versions on Philips (RBCD), I found little to complain about and much to enjoy in the Storioni Trio’s performances of these glorious works.

Copyright © 2007 Graham Williams and SA-CD.net

Site review by ramesh June 10, 2007
Performance:  Sonics (S):
With some reservations for chamber music aficionados, this SACD is recommendable for all those interested in classical music. The two Schubert piano trios are some of the most important in the repertory. Generally, these works spread onto two SACDs. Although this disc totals a generous 79 1/2 minutes, PentaTone have disclosed that a couple of edits of repeats have been observed to fit these works onto one hybrid SACD. This means that the outer movements of the Second Trio last for 12:31 and 13:26, compared to my CD reference of the Schiff-Shiokawa-Perényi trio on Teldec which, with repeats, have durations of 16:01 and 19:27 respectively! The decision to edit the rather prolix Second Trio, is on balance, the correct option. This gives the SACD a significant price advantage, whilst making the heavenly lengths of the Second Trio more negotiable for all except the most loitering Schubertian.

The booklet writer claims that both these trios were completed within the last year of Schubert's life, along with the Great C major symphony. However, Graham Johnson in his voluminous notes to Volume 26 of the Hyperion Schubert song edition states that 'Des Sängers Habe' D832, composed in February 1825 has similar driving right-hand piano triplets to the opening movement of the First Trio. Moreover, both works are in B flat. Additionally, John Reed in his book, 'Schubert : the final years' [ Faber, 1972 ], spends several pages discussing thematic similarities of the First Trio to the Great C major symphony and the 1825 piano sonatas, as well as biographical evidence. Reed concludes that both the First Trio and the Great C major symphony were substantially or entirely composed in 1825, and hence do not belong to the tragic ambience of the greatest works of 1827-8.

The reason I deal with this chronology is that many of Schubert's greatest non-vocal works seem to be able to accommodate the widest range of performance tempi. The case of the andante of the Great C major symphony is a case in point. Marked 'andante con moto', as is the slow movement of the Second Trio, this work has been given a tragic cast in slow performances by Furtwängler and Giulini, and a brisk jaunt in the meadow by Toscanini, Munch in an RCA SACD, Krips and Solti. Although the Storioni take the slow movements of both trios at a leisurely 9:48 and 10:06, their performances of both trios stress the light over the shade.

Compared to the Cortot-Thibaud-Casals, Oistrakh and Schiff trios, the Storioni interpret the First Trio as a summery, optimistic excursion. Their interpretations hew more to the 'classical' than 'romantic' terms of expressiveness. This applies to both trios. Chamber music fans who have an unshiftable allegiance to the melancholic and demonic Schubert will dismiss these performances as lightweight, eg the 'plonking' and untragic opening piano repeated notes of the slow movement of the Second Trio. However, the music fully admits a classical interpretation, so long as it is consistent, rather than an accidental byproduct of musicians who have failed to penetrate into the composer's world. Listening to these interpretations several times, I feel that the Storioni have chosen this aesthetic approach deliberately, rather than due to any significant failure of artistic imagination. Compared to the Oistrakh and Cortot Trios, the development sections of the first two movements of the First Trio lack dramatic vigor, the full sense of overarching sonata architecture. However, the exposition of the first movement is splendid, neither over-accented nor too smooth, with an outstandingly sensitive cello entrance for the second subject. Compared to Oistrakh, the violinist in the scherzo of the First Trio doesn't have the power in the double stopping, and the bowing over alternating strings is less secure. Nevertheless, he blends in better with his colleagues compared to the virtuosos moonlighting with chamber musicians.

The magnificent recording, as it was in the Storioni's Beethoven Trios, tips the recommendation fully in favour of this SACD. In the June 2007 issue of the audiophile journal 'Stereophile', an interview with Bea Lam of the Vacuum Tube Logic company reveals that she utilises the famous late 1950s recording of Clifford Curzon's performance with Viennese strings of Schubert's 'Trout' Quintet to voice their amplifiers. She states that this work is a musical test of any hi-fi to correctly reproduce the full range of string and piano tone, from the highest to lowest pitches. If she listened to this SACD, except for the absence of the double bass tonalities, she would find a worthy 21st Century substitute. Pizzicati are accurately rich without being either muddy or over-emphatic. The Steinway D is a champion instrument, sonorously brilliant over its entire compass, without obscuring the strings. In comparison, the 1995 Teldec recording of the Schiff trio sounds murky, along with the customary PCM digital artefacts. Although I haven't heard the other two SACD releases of the Schubert piano trios, this is the first disc where I can hear virtually all the notes played by all the instruments, blended yet individually identifiable.

Copyright © 2007 Ramesh Nair and SA-CD.net

Site review by Polly Nomial May 7, 2007
Performance:  Sonics (MC):
Comparisons will inevitably be made between this recording and the competing Schubert: Piano Trios - Haydn Trio Eisenstadt.

The fundamental difference is that the Haydn Trio Eisenstadt fully capture the inherent contradictions of Schubert’s writing whereas the Storioni Trio, if one where to exaggerate unkindly, treat these trios as glorified salon music. This is encapsulated by examining the great slow movement of the second trio. Here the Haydn Trio Eisenstadt manage to move from a beautiful entrancing dream to nightmarish visions all the while accompanied by the troubling march figuration is something that eludes their Dutch competitors. The Storioni are just too polite and sound reluctant to delve beneath the veneer of the score.

The strongest point in favour of the Storioni Trio is that they manage (by omitting certain repeats – see the discussion) to fit the major works onto one extremely well-filled disc and thus give themselves a price advantage. However, I would not want to be without the gorgeous Adagio D.897 which has to be omitted here.

The recording is well integrated, the artists placed closer together than in Capriccio recording and they are also accorded smoother, cleaner sound.

Sadly not recommended from a musical standpoint.

Copyright © 2007 John Broggio and SA-CD.net